Extractive visions: Sweden's quest for China's natural resources, 1913-1917

This article scrutinises one of the most fascinating and ambitious cases of Swedish informal empire-building in the industrial age: the skilfully orchestrated attempts by scientists, diplomats, industrial companies and financial institutions to seize control over early Republican China's most s...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Scandinavian economic history review 2021-05, Vol.69 (2), p.158-176
Hauptverfasser: Högselius, Per, Song, Yunwei
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This article scrutinises one of the most fascinating and ambitious cases of Swedish informal empire-building in the industrial age: the skilfully orchestrated attempts by scientists, diplomats, industrial companies and financial institutions to seize control over early Republican China's most strategic industrial sector - its iron and steel complex. Sweden's 'extractive vision', as we call it, started with the recruitment of Johan Gunnar Andersson, head of the Swedish Geological Survey, as a key advisor to the Chinese government. Contrary to earlier research on Andersson's Chinese career, which narrowly portrays Andersson as a scientist, we show that he was closely affiliated with the exploitative interests of Swedish industrial and foreign-policy actors. In the end he took the lead in seeking to secure, for Sweden, a quasi-colonial presence in Republican China, centring on large-scale extraction of Chinese iron ore, profit-maximising iron exports throughout the Pacific region and construction and operation of China's largest steel mills and weapons factories.
ISSN:0358-5522
1750-2837
1750-2837
DOI:10.1080/03585522.2020.1789731